Quintarelli C et al. (MAR 2011)
Blood 117 12 3353--62
High-avidity cytotoxic T lymphocytes specific for a new PRAME-derived peptide can target leukemic and leukemic-precursor cells.
The cancer testis antigen (CTA) preferentially expressed antigen of melanoma (PRAME) is overexpressed by many hematologic malignancies,but is absent on normal tissues,including hematopoietic progenitor cells,and may therefore be an appropriate candidate for T cell-mediated immunotherapy. Because it is likely that an effective antitumor response will require high-avidity,PRAME-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs),we attempted to generate such CTLs using professional and artificial antigen-presenting cells loaded with a peptide library spanning the entire PRAME protein and consisting of 125 synthetic pentadecapeptides overlapping by 11 amino acids. We successfully generated polyclonal,PRAME-specific CTL lines and elicited high-avidity CTLs,with a high proportion of cells recognizing a previously uninvestigated HLA-A*02-restricted epitope,P435-9mer (NLTHVLYPV). These PRAME-CTLs could be generated both from normal donors and from subjects with PRAME(+) hematologic malignancies. The cytotoxic activity of our PRAME-specific CTLs was directed not only against leukemic blasts,but also against leukemic progenitor cells as assessed by colony-forming-inhibition assays,which have been implicated in leukemia relapse. These PRAME-directed CTLs did not affect normal hematopoietic progenitors,indicating that this approach may be of value for immunotherapy of PRAME(+) hematologic malignancies.
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Le Dieu R et al. (AUG 2009)
Journal of immunological methods 348 1-2 95--100
Negative immunomagnetic selection of T cells from peripheral blood of presentation AML specimens.
To date,studies on T cells in acute myeloid leukemia (AML) have been limited to flow cytometric analysis of whole peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) specimens or functional work looking at the impact of AML myeloblasts on normal or remission T cells. This lack of information on T cells at the time of presentation with disease is due in part to the difficulty in isolating sufficiently pure T cells from these specimens for further study. Negative immunomagnetic selection has been the method of choice for isolating immune cells for functional studies due to concerns that binding antibodies to the cell surface may induce cellular activation,block ligand-receptor interactions or result in immune clearance. In order specifically to study T cells in presentation AML specimens,we set out to develop a method of isolating highly pure CD4 and CD8 T cells by negative selection from the peripheral blood (PB) of newly diagnosed AML patients. This technique,unlike T cell selection from PB from normal individuals or from patients with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia,was extremely problematic due to properties of the leukaemic myeloblasts. A successful method was eventually optimized requiring the use of a custom antibody cocktail consisting of CD33,CD34,CD123,CD11c and CD36,to deplete myeloblasts.
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